From 1985 Page 80
Month: May 2022
25th Year of Wayne Alumni
Still hard for me to believe, but this website has been up in one form or another since 1997, making this the 25th year. Retirement has given me the ability to focus attention on this again. Much of the pre-2016 website has been restored, Registration has been re-enabled, the alumni directory is back, yearbook picture of the week is more consistent, and some broken features have been fixed.
Wayne Basketball History has been updated, and Wayne Soccer History has also been updated.
I get some occasional feedback and comments, and hopefully people still get some benefit from it being available. In a couple of months, it will be time for renewal of the web hosting, and hopefully I can get a handful of people to contribute to keeping the site available. Stay tuned for announcements about this in the future.
It seems like many people access the Wayne Alumni Facebook page to keep up-to-date. Just FYI, all posts on the website are not posted on the Wayne Alumni Facebook page. Facebook won’t allow me to automatically update the page when I post on waynealumni.org, so I have to manually do it. I try to minimize the Facebook clutter, since for most people it is become a vast wasteland. So visit waynealmni.org directly to see all the latest.
Things I hope to do in the future:
- Get access to more yearbooks
- Scan more yearbooks
- Enlist people to contribute content to the site
- Get more participation form the 2000s classes
- Develop a succession plan
There are probably more, but I will post updates as required.
Pep Band
When I was in middle school, I started attending high school basketball games. This was probably 1968-70. The “old gym” was the only gym back then, and it probably didn’t hold a huge number of people. But entertainment choices were more limited then, and the stands were usually pretty well packed, even when the team’s record was not that great.
I’m just guessing, but at least 50% of the crowd were students. There also was a concept in those days called cheerleaders. Before it was turned into a sport, cheerleaders actually attended all the games and tried to keep the crowd enthused. Nothing against it being a sport, but seems odd that the original intention was lost completely.
Anyway, in addition to the cheerleaders, at least in 1968-70 (or thereabouts), there was this thing called a pep band. If you’ve ever been to a Syracuse University basketball game at the dome, and it’s not winter break (Dec 20 – Jan 20), you may have seen the student band playing in the student section. It was kind of like that, but only 15 people. And they somehow squeezed between the two sections of bleachers behind the scoring table.
At that time, I was probably playing in the middle school band as a percussionist, so I always watched them with interest. But I always remembered how loud they were, with no amplification. I don’t know all the songs they played, but think of a college football game. That kind of music. One song I do remember was “Oh Wisconsin”. It was just a great atmosphere that the band contributed to.
Maybe my ears were untrained, but I thought they were very good.
Unfortunately, I don’t think it last much beyond 1970. It was probably difficult to get all 15 players to attend every home game. Maybe you could do without one now and again, but it must have been hard. Then to have one of the music teachers also commit as well. So it didn’t last. But even if Wayne didn’t win, you knew that band was good!
Yearbook Picture of the Week
Traditions Lost – The Eagle
Traditions are nice, maybe not always essential, to be maintained. It is also nice to evolve. Sometimes they just fade away. By virtue of working on this website, I have had an opportunity to see most of Wayne Central’s Yearbooks (72 so far). I have around 26 myself. We have a page on the website of all (except a couple) of the yearbook covers. The Wayne Central yearbook has a title “The Eagle”. The early ones, it was prominently displayed on the cover. After about 5 years, for unknown reasons, it was shortened to “Eagle”. Sometimes, the name did not appear on the cover, other times an Eagle was depicted on the cover.
In the 50s and 60s, often the yearbook had a visual theme, with artwork, graphics, font. Starting in the late 80’s, themes were appearing again, but now with the theme given a name, like “Climbing Life’s Ladders” or “On the Move”. Which is OK, but now often replacing “The Eagle” or “Eagle” on the cover. Some still depicted an Eagle on the cover, some not. Themes seem predominate in the 1990s for many years after. In 2018, 2019, 2020, they just say “Wayne Eagles” on the cover (very nice appearing covers), which is not the name of the yearbook, it is the name of our sports teams.
I’m sure the student yearbook staff putting yearbooks together is a lot of thankless work, doing something they never have done before. I would hope a yearbook advisor would be aware of what the yearbook name is supposed to be.
I like the themes and some are very clever. It seems like it would be easy to include “The Eagle” or “Eagle” on the cover and still have a theme. Just a suggestion.
Alumni Directory Restored
For those who are interested –
Over the last few weeks, effort has been put into creating and restoring the Alumni Directory. Initially, the archived version from 2016 was made available. Then a new user registration system was added. Finally, the two were merged together after some considerable effort.
One significant change was to go to a standard First Name, (Maiden Name), Last Name format for Alumnae who have taken their spouses last name. The directory is sorted by last name now.
Another was to remove the ability to contact classmates via this site. It was never used much, and there are always privacy concerns. This is one (of many) reasons the directory was not continued after 2016. But there were many people who asked why it wasn’t and could we get it back.
Since the directory has been around for 25 years, there are obviously out-of-date listings. There is some clean-up that can be done, like removing duplicates, etc., but people may want to update their listing. The main issue with merging the old and new directories is the logins, user name, email, and passwords. The new system being used now takes user names. User names were generated automatically during the merge, and likely no one will like them. Luckily, the system also allows logins by email address. There is uncertainty about passwords. In the old directory, probably 50% of the listings were before there was any login system. So those users had no password. Again, those users have had an automatically generated password in the new system to satisfy the requirements of merging.
What does all this mean? If you still have access to the email you originally used prior to 2016 on this site and the password, theoretically you should be able to login. If you just have the email (and you still use it), but don’t remember your password, you should be able to click on the Forgot Password link on the login screen. Theoretically, because it has not been tested.
Or you could just re-register. There will be regular scans looking for duplicates, and older listings will be deleted.
Users who never had a login will have to register here (see main menu). If you don’t care, nothing needs to be done.
There will be an FAQ put together to make some of this info easily available if users want edit or replace their listings.
Yearbook Picture of the Week
Registration for Alumni Directory Available Again
Some effort has been made to re-enable a registration system again for the website, and also create an alumni directory display similar to what we had previously. An improved registration form has been created to help with this, as the one tried a few years ago was lacking.
Unfortunately, for the 50 or so people who registered a few years ago, you probably received an email (I did) saying your account was deleted. It was necessary as we had to change the database. You will need to re-register if you want to be in the directory.
Hopefully methods to help avoid spam will work. If not, there might be additional steps that can be taken.